Word: caution
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...parts most exposed, as the face, neck and hands, morning and evening. Water should not be allowed to dry into the hair, as a disagreeable odor is sometimes produced in this way, and the action of the glands interfered with. A fine-toothed comb should be used with great caution, and no comb violently...
...caution students in the college buildings against leaving their doors unlatched, or leaving anything of value outside their doors. As a natural result of the condition of the turf in the yard and of the severity of the weather and of rather lax efforts on the part of the yard authorities, that most objectionable element of Cambridge society, an element the thought of which means quite as much as the name, has besieged the college dormitories. And here for its labors this objectionable element finds opportunities for the grossest kind of misbehavior, and accepts them most assiduously. What...
...unanimous vote of the citizens' convention was looked for as a foregone conclusion. The disposition of young men of thorough collegiate and professional training to enter politics for honorable service is one of the hopeful signs of the times. Age may be needed to give experience and caution, but young men furnish an enthusiasm and faith in reform which most of their elders fail to possess...
...many principles of political economy, but it is a question if the writer has not laid too much stress upon this point. In some parts of the subject diagrams can be used freely, but sometimes a diagram may be as misleading as a false analogy, and therefore extreme caution is needed...
...other colleges are thinking the system a good one, and realizing that without it they cannot compete with advancing Harvard. "President Robinson is careful not to make the elective system a hobby. It is a serious question. To what extent shall the system of electives be carried." This caution is commendable, as caution is always commendable. It is fortunate for Brown, and all the other colleges as well, that Harvard was willing to try the system first; and it has been fortunate for Harvard that the trial has proved so satisfactory and successful...